Saturday, December 13, 2008

Counting Shutter Clicks on a Nikon DSLR

If you are interested in how many times your shutter has gone off in your Nikon DSLR, you can look at the EXIF data of your most recent picture. The information is embedded there, but it may not be very obvious how to find it. The following has been checked on a D40X, D50 and D300.

If your latest photo is a NEF, open it with Adobe Photoshop. Then go to File > File Info... > Advanced. Expand the schema http://ns.adobe.com/exif/1.0/aux/ . The field aux:ImageNumber contains the shutter count. (If you try opening a JPEG from the camera, that field is not available in Photoshop.)

If your latest photo is a jpeg, and you have a Mac, open the photo with the free EXIF Viewer. The shutter count is in a field called "Camera Actuations".

If your latest photo is a NEF, but you do not have Adobe Photoshop or money to buy Photoshop or any additional software at all, you can convert the NEF to JPEG using ViewNX (which is free) and then open it with EXIF Viewer, and the information will be there, still called "Camera Actuations".

People with Windows seem to often use Opanda for the same purpose.

I have not been able to localise this kind of information in Nikon's own software.

If you have a Mac, the shutter count can be found in Preview: Tools > Show Inspector > I > Nikon.


Friday, December 12, 2008

Crashing Adobe Bridge CS4

If Adobe Bridge is crashing, it is likely that it tries to handle files it considers corrupt. For example this file has crashed Bridge on both Windows Vista and Mac OS X 10.5.

The "solution" is to identify the corrupt file and remove it, or open it in Photoshop and save it under another name. This is of course not a long term solution, as you never know when you will stumble over another jpeg, that Bridge considers corrupt.

I also had problems accessing any folders that contained PDF files for some time. The solution here was more subtle. I had just installed some new free fronts (CODE2001.TTF,
KurKlim.0804207-6.ttf, jiret.ttf, Kedage.dfont, MalOtf.ttf, malayalam.ttf, Rupali_0.72.ttf, SolaimanLipi_0.52.ttf, Malithi Web.ttf and Pothana.ttf, in case you wonder). Removing those fonts from the Font folder fixed the problem for Bridge and pdf files. The annoying thing is that putting them back, did not cause the problem again, so it may have been something with a corrupt font cache or so, and it is possible that we will never know exactly what caused the problem.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Step back one Camera Raw version

If there is a problem with Apple's Camera Raw version (like there was with 2.2), you can revert to the previous version:
  1. Delete the file "System/Library/CoreServices/RawCamera.bundle".
  2. Reinstall the previous version from Apple's site. You should be able to find them here.